“The Women” By Kristin Hannah

At a party celebrating her brother Finley being shipped overseas to fight in Vietnam, Frances McGarth’s eyes are opened to the possibility of women as heroes. Found standing in front of her father’s coveted heroes wall by Rye Walsh, Finely’s friend, who inspires her to serve. Frances proceeds to volunteer as a nurse, the only way women are allowed to participate in combat. Hoping she’d be able to see her brother and be the first female addition to the wall, adorned with her ancestors who served in previous battles. Once there, Frances finds out the infirmary is fraught with trauma and danger. Leaving her in do or die situations.

It’s in Vietnam where she meets life long best friends Barbara Johnson & Ethel Flint, after being put through the wringer. Women who become family. Pulling her out of the trenches of despair as she battles ptsd, heartbreak, deception, betrayal, drug addiction and self-harm. Reacclimatizing to life back home is difficult when society invalidates the role women played in the war, denying their existent overseas altogether, and degrades veterans upon re-entry. A harrowing, bittersweet must read. To everyone who participated after being coerced by the United States Government and discarded, thank you for your service. Via: Amazon

“Vessels Of The Alchemical Sun”

“Thank God for girlfriends. In this crazy, chaotic, divided world that was run by men, you could count on the women.”
-The Women

Artist: Marie Alexander

Trump Playbook: LBJ Lied About Winning Too

“The Stars and Stripes called it the Tet Offensive: a massive coordinated attack across the county by the North Vietnamese in the early hours of January 31st 1968, the bloodiest day of the Vietnam War so far. The attack blew the doors off the secret side of the war. Apparently, when Walter Cronkite reported on the Tet carnage, he’d said—on air— ‘What the hell is going on? I thought we were winning the war.’

Suddenly everyone in the media was asking the question: What in the hell is going in Vietnam?

On February 2, LBJ used death as the success matrix of Tet, claiming 10,000 North Vietnamese had died and only 249 Americans…A lie Frankie was sure, given the number of deaths she’d witnessed at the Seventy-First alone…”

-The Women: A Novel

Via: Wikipedia